Intensifying adverbials: emphasisers, amplifiers, downtoners
Intensifying adverbials
have some unique characteristics. They are common, especially in spoken
language and their mastery can significantly enhance our learners'
communicative powers.
Most of the exemplification which follows concerns adverbs proper
(because they are the most common forms) but it should always be
remembered that adverbials of other sorts, particular prepositional
phrases (such as in general), noun phrases (such as a bit)
and adverb phrases (such as more or less) also function in
this way.
Here's the list of the contents of this guide.
Clicking on -top- at the end of each section will
bring you back to this menu.
A warning |
Any search of the web for these things will
produce some misleading results. In many cases, they will be
wrongly (or even not) classified, wrongly described or not really
adverbials (or even adverbs) at all. The following attempts to avoid these pitfalls.
The reason for the confusion is often a naïve
understanding of the term intensifier which, at first sight,
seems to imply only making things stronger (because that's what it
means in a non-technical sense).
This is, however, not a non-technical area.
Intensifying adverbials do not always increase the effect of item they
modify, as a careless understanding of the term would suggest.
They can also suggest a low degree (downtoning) or an approximate degree. They
are all analysed here as intensifying adverbials because they all affect
the intensity of what is said or written.
An alternative (wrong) term for these is, because of the function they perform,
adverbs of degree. However, that disguises the difference between,
e.g.:
I greatly enjoyed the film
She slightly overstated the case
They deeply respected their professor
in which the adverbs of degree modify the verbs and
You are remarkably intelligent
She was tremendously upset
They were absolutely furious
which are examples of the adverbs functioning as intensifiers of the
adjectives which they modify. It makes sense, therefore, to focus
separately on adverbs of degree (which modify verbs for the most part)
and intensifying adverbials which perform a different function
altogether despite the fact that some adverbials may fall into both
categories depending on use.
This is not a universally accepted definition because some sources will
stick to the idea that an intensifier must, by definition, make the
modified element stronger or more intense. Compare, for example:
That is somewhat trivial
which reduces the effect of the adjective with
That is extremely trivial
which enhances the effect of the adjective but, at the same time, makes
the subject less, not more, important. Replacing trivial
with important results in the reverse.
This guide uses a number of technical terms, all of which are defined below but other analyses vary in the categories they use and the terms they employ. Usually, however, terminology is more or less parallel so do not be surprised if you come across alternative categories from the ones used here.
Many of these are adverbs derive from intensifying adjectives
which perform a similar role (for more, see the guide to
intensifying adjectives, linked below). Some, however, do not
and the limiting adjectives certain and particular
as in, e.g.:
A certain difference of opinion arose
That particular student was quite wrong
are used adverbially as emphasisers as in:
That is certainly the wrong approach
This is particularly difficult to do
Style and register |
While the adverbs and adverbials which form the topic of this guide are often to be found in quite formal writing operating as adjuncts modifying verbs, intensifying adverbials which affect adjectives and adjective phrases are more common in spoken language for good reasons. So, for example, we find an adverb such as positively used to modify a verb, assert, as in:
... it is those who know
little, and not those who know much, who so positively assert that
this or that problem will never be solved by science
Charles Darwin, Introduction to the
Descent of Man (1971), introduction
However, we are unlikely to encounter the same adverb used as an intensifier in, e.g.:
... it is a positively brilliant idea
because the use of such an adverb to amplify
or boost the power of the adjective is usually confined to less
formal written or informal spoken texts. In formal texts, the
adjective alone will be chosen with care to carry the whole meaning
and there are those who would argue that the use of positively
in that clause is actually redundant because it adds so little to
the meaning.
In fact, research shows that using intensifiers inappropriately in
formal written language actually decreases rather than increases the
writer's credibility. The advice is to avoid their overuse in
academic, scientific and legal registers.
Intensifiers are used to signal
expressiveness and function to fulfil what some see as a basic human
need to add impact to what is being said. They occur
frequently, too, in newspaper language and in informal writing such
as texts and emails. They are vanishingly rare in formal
written communication because they are stylistically disallowed in
that environment.
It is for this reason that intensifiers are subject to fashion and
to a certain amount of bleaching out of their meanings. We
shall consider fashion with regard to these items in more detail
below.
Definitions and three types |
Intensifiers are not separate word classes. They are identified
by what they do semantically rather than syntactically, therefore.
Many intensifiers are akin to (and sometimes confused with) adverbs of
manner but when the words are used as intensifiers, they modify not a
verb directly but another adverb or an adjective (mostly). So, for
example, in these sentences we have simple adverbs of manner modifying
the verb and not acting as intensifiers of any kind:
She spoke severely
They explained plainly
I dived deeply
Mary complained bitterly
She barely spoke
They judged the outcome fairly
and in all these cases, the adverb is doing what adverbs mostly do and
telling us the manner in which the action is understood to have
happened.
Intensifiers, on the other hand, do not modify verbs (in fact,
they cannot by definition) but instead add emotional strength or
emphasis to another sentence or clause element. In the
following, therefore, all the word in
black are intensifiers of one sort or another:
That was
severely disruptive
You are plainly wrong
That is deeply
frustrating
We are bitterly opposed
to the idea
It was barely acceptable
That was fairly perfect!
It was fairly well done
and you can see that although the words are the same, they are
performing a very different function.
The central and most common intensifier in English is the adverb
very which itself cannot modify a verb directly so we do not
allow:
*She very drove
because this adverb is only an intensifier.
The word can act as a simple test for intensification because if it
can replace the adverb in question, we know immediately that we are
dealing with intensification.
There are these three sorts of intensifying adverbials. In these all the examples are of adverbs modifying adjectives to keep things simple but, as we shall shortly see, there are many other items that they can modify and there are other forms which can do the modification, too.
- Amplifiers increase the strength of the item modified
- Maximisers denoting the extreme end of a scale:
That is completely wrong
You are totally mistaken
That is wholly correct - Boosters which enhance the strength of the item:
You are deeply mistaken
That is severely limited
They were considerably delayed
- Maximisers denoting the extreme end of a scale:
- Emphasisers usually express the speaker's point of view, making
it clear that something is to be considered emphatic and stressed.
That is plainly untrue
She's simply wonderful
She is obviously uncertain
That's evidently better - Downtoners diminish the strength of the item
they modify
They come in three shades:- compromisers (a small group which imply the speaker is not entirely certain)
That's quite nice
He's sort of friendly
That's usually OK
These intensifiers are often accompanied by other hedging devices such as in:
The music might have been quite loud
That's more or less OK, I think
and so on. - diminishers and minimisers which reduce the effect of the
item they modify
Diminishers reduce the strength of what is said and are the antonyms of boosters:
That's mildly interesting
He's slightly irritating
This is merely technical
whereas minimisers place it at the lowest end of a scale and are the antonyms of maximisers:
It's just possible
That is not in the least entertaining
That's marginally allowable
and are generally negative in sense. - approximators which suggest that the quality is close but
not in fact quite there
That's practically perfect
but not perfect
She's almost approachable
but not actually approachable
That's virtually illiterate
but not fully illiterate.
- compromisers (a small group which imply the speaker is not entirely certain)
Distinguishing the forms |
If you want to distinguish precisely between an amplifier and
an emphasiser, there is a simple test.
Amplifiers can appear in sentences such as:
She didn't altogether
enjoy the party but she enjoyed it a bit
Emphasisers in the same sort of sentence produce nonsense:
*She really
didn't enjoy the party but she enjoyed it
a bit
(Quirk et al, p444)
A summary of intensifiers
Here's where we are:
For teaching purposes, it makes some sense to divide things up
like this because otherwise the area becomes too vague and hard to
access. However, compromisers and approximators form a group
(because it is often difficult and rarely necessary to distinguish
them) and so do amplifiers (of both sorts) and emphasisers.
It also makes sense, nevertheless, to treat downtoners separately
from the other categories because of their function.
If you like, you can take a matching test to see if you can
identify the seven different sorts of these.
Click here to do that.
Please don't worry if you didn't have all the right answers.
It is sometimes very difficult to decide what the function of an
intensifier is without a context and some co-text.
Fashion |
Emphasisers in particular, go in and out of fashion as they
become worn by overuse and lose their effect. Expressions such as
I'm terribly happy to see you
She's awfully nice
are now rarely heard although they were in common parlance not
too long ago and may well come back into fashion. The process is
known as renewal and is a persistent feature of the language. As
words such as tremendously, once confined only to collocation
with adjectives expressing fear or apprehension (because it derives from
the Latin tremendus, meaning fearful) it is now
encountered with a much wider range of collocating adjectives with have
nothing to do with fear or apprehension. We may hear, then:
tremendously interesting
tremendously important
tremendously cold
and thousands of other expressions which, if we rely on etymology for
our understanding of meaning are nonsense. Fortunately, we do not
have to and generally should not rely on etymology for meaning.
The adverb so was once only encountered in comparative
expressions such as
She was so happy that she jumped for joy
and so on.
Recently, the emphasiser has become very common and now occurs as a
modifying adjunct (and adverb of manner, not an intensifier) as in, for
example:
I so like your scarf
I so enjoyed meeting his mother
and even modifying a noun phrase as in, e.g.:
He is so the person I want to meet
etc.
It also now regularly occurs as an adverb intensifier of an adjective with no
comparative meaning in, for example:
That is so beautiful
in which it just means something akin to very but it, too, will one day fall from use as it becomes stale and its
strength is eroded.
Nobody knows what might replace it. Perhaps heartily will
see a return to fashion or a new one altogether will be invented.
See also the comments on the use of well below.
Other adverbs such as terribly and awfully were
once confined to associations of fear and awe but
have been delexicalised in Modern English and now function as simple
amplifiers. They have not retained their negative connotation
in the language either so while less than a hundred or so years ago
we would only encounter terribly in expressions such as
They were terribly violent
She was terribly cruel
The gods were awfully angry
and so on, we now regularly encounter expressions such as
That was really awfully kind of you
He's terribly intelligent
and so on.
Such extended and delexicalised uses of these two adverbs are
traceable to the mid-20th century.
One intensifier adverb, incredibly, and its adjectival
equivalent, has recently lost its
sense of difficult or impossible to believe and now means
something close to very, at least in careless and informal
language. It, too, will fall out of fashion and may even be
restored to its previous meaning (with any luck).
Of course, in advertising speak, the word incredibly means
something like possibly mildly interesting to someone.
Functions: what's so special? |
Adverbs, of course, are also a subclass of adverbials and function to modify verb phrases and other language elements. That is, however, not what concerns us here. Linked below is a general guide to adverbs and a guide to adverbials and you can follow those links to consider a broader picture.
As was stated at the outset, intensifiers do not directly modify
verbs at all.
These intensifying adverbials (which are most frequently adverbs
proper) perform some discrete functions. They modify:
- adjectives
- other adverbs
- prepositional phrases
- determiners
- noun phrases
Can you pick out what the adverbs, in black, are doing in the following examples? Click here when you have a list.
- He spoke extremely amusingly
- That's very nice of you
- He kicked the ball right out of the ground
- Almost every boy came
- That is slightly less than I expected
- I'm afraid her hair was rather a shambles
- This is only just allowable
- Here the adverb, extremely,
is modifying another adverb, amusingly.
It is an amplifier boosting the strength of amusingly. - Here the adverb, very, is modifying an adjective,
nice.
It is a simple amplifier and sometimes simply called a booster. - Here the adverb, right, is modifying a prepositional phrase,
out of the ground.
There is a small class of these amplifiers of prepositional phrases. This amplifier is a maximiser. - Here the adverb, almost, is modifying a determiner, every.
It is an approximator. - Here, the adverb slightly, is also modifying a
determiner, less which is part of a clause.
It's a diminisher. - Here the adverb, rather, is modifying a noun phrase,
a shambles. There are
really only three common adverbs that can do this (the other ones
are quite and
such). These are
sometimes classified as pre-determiners, to which there is
a guide on this site, linked in the list of related guides at
the end.
Here, we can classify it as a downtoner and some would call it a compromiser. - There are two adverbs here, often seen in tandem, which are
modifying the adjective, allowable.
Here, the combination functions as a minimiser because the implication is that there is no level below this in terms of permissibility.
Modifying an adjective |
|
too hot to drink |
Adverbials which modify adjectives are overwhelmingly adverbs so that
is our focus here.
It should remembered that other structures can do this job, too, so we
can have:
- noun phrases (often determiners in some environments)
The party was a bit noisy - prepositional phrases
She was for the most part quite satisfied - adverbial phrases:
That is utterly and completely perfect
Here are four more examples. What's going on? Click here when you have an idea.
- She has a really beautiful face
- It was a slightly mistaken view
- The meal was hot enough
- It is psychologically impossible for him to agree
- In this sentence, the adverb is a simple amplifier (either a
maximiser or a booster).
That is by far the most common occurrence. Other
amplifiers include, e.g., very (the most common
booster by a
street) and these:
Boosters Maximisers awfully
bitterly
certainly
dangerously
decidedly
easily
enormously
exceptionally
excessively
extraordinarily
extremely
fairly
greatly
highly
hugely
incrediblyinordinately
intensely
massively
openly
outstandingly
particularly
pretty
rather
readily
really
remarkably
seriously
strongly
terribly
unbelievably
utterlyabsolutely
completely
comprehensively
downright
entirely
exclusively
exhaustively
fully
perfectly
solely
supremely
thoroughly
totally
wholly
Prepositional adverbial expressions can also perform an amplifying function as in, e.g., without question, from top to bottom, without exception, in every respect and these are usually maximisers.
Three words in this list, fairly, pretty and rather, get a section to themselves (below) because they are not solely amplifiers. - Here the adverb is a downtoner, reducing the impact of the
adjective, mistaken. Downtoners are rarer but
other examples include somewhat, insignificantly,
comparatively, marginally and
faintly.
That's almost a complete list, by the way, and not too taxing to
teach or learn.
A downtoner relies on the following adjective for its function. For example, in
It was insignificantly small
the adverb is actually an amplifier because it increases the strength of small.
However, in
It was insignificantly important
it functions to reduce the impact of important and is a downtoner.
Some determiner-like expressions, such as a bit, a little etc. also function as downtoners. - Here the downtoning adverb, enough, is peculiar in being the only one which follows rather than precedes what it is modifying. It has to be taught separately.
- This is an example of a small class of adverbs which
function to express a point of view, taking the place of
Considered psychologically ... . Here it is a
form of limiter serving to express the fact that the
speaker's view should be taken only to concern the adverb. Other examples
include theoretically, technically,
politically, ethically, honestly, plainly etc. There actually aren't
that many and they are usually described as style disjuncts or
style adjuncts.
Adjuncts modify only the verb or adjective phrase as in, e.g.:
He spoke honestly
That is plainly wrong
whereas disjuncts modify the whole clause as in, e.g.:
Honestly, she isn't the right person for the job
She was, plainly, not prepared to argue
and express the speakers angle concerning what is said.
There is a guide to adverbials which includes these on this site, linked in the list of related guides at the end.
well |
A fairly recent development is the extended use of the
intensifying adverb well as a synonym for very.
It has occurred for centuries in expressions such as
well pleased
well organised
well accepted
well bred
well educated
and operates as an intensifier for positive participial adjectives.
As is the case with very, it is not normally used to modify
extreme or ungradable adjectives. Additionally, it cannot be
used to modify any negatively connoted adjectives so, for example:
*well broken
*well disorganised
*well ignorant
and so on, are not normally encountered.
Of late, the use has also been developed beyond positive,
participial and gradable adjectives in informal speech to include
expressions such as
well good
well angry
well annoyed
well envious
well amazed
well heartbroken
etc.
There are those who denigrate this use as illiterate but time will
tell whether it becomes acceptable and how durable it will be.
Hyphenation |
Hyphenation with adjectives modified by intensifying adverbs, especially well and its antonyms, badly and poorly, but also with other intensifiers is a debatable area. Spell checkers and dictionaries do not agree on the style to be used.
There are three issues:
- Compound adjective or modified adjective?
If removing the adverb from the phrases leaves no or a different sense, it may be considered a compound adjective. Therefore, we get, e.g.:
well-adjusted people
well-presented essays
badly-built houses
fully-meant comments
and so on because we cannot use the adjectives alone to betoken the same meanings and do not permit:
*adjusted people
*presented essays
*built houses
*meant comments.
On the other hand, if we can omit the modifying adverb with no great change in meaning as in:
well-pleased customer
well-painted house
well-known writer
hugely-respected academics
entirely-forgotten issue
then we are dealing with just an adjective modified by an intensifier because we can have:
pleased customer
painted house
known writer
respected academics
forgotten issue - Attributive use:
When the combination of an adverb + adjective is used attributively, a hyphen is often considered conventional whatever the meaning of the phrase and whether it is a compound adjective or an adjective modified by an adverb.
Compound adjectives always require the hyphen so we get, e.g.:
It was a well-aimed question
She asked a highly-connected friend for help
They are very well-behaved children
They are badly-behaved dogs
It was a badly-designed house
It was a poorly-phrased letter
They had a poorly-made car
They tried to employ only well-adjusted people
The students wrote well-presented essays
The company invested in well-built houses
Hers was a bitterly-worded letter
and in these cases, removing the adverbs results in something close to nonsense because we cannot allow:
*an aimed question
*a connected friend
*behaved children
*behaved dogs
*designed house
*phrased letter
*made car
*adjusted people
*presented essays
*built houses
*worded letter
However, we also use the hyphen in other cases of attributive adjective use, even when the phrase is not operating as a compound adjective, so we get, e.g.:
They were well-pleased customers
They were well-known problems
because we can also allow:
pleased customers
known problems
This is notably the case with common adverbs such as well, badly, poorly etc. but also occurs with other intensifiers such as in:
It was a fully-formed plan
She had a readily-understood excuse
She said he was an easily-forgotten man
But the majority of the adverbs listed in this section are not used with a hyphen. - Predicative use:
Even when the adverb forms part of a compound adjective, we can conventionally omit the hyphen so we allow:
The question was well aimed
Her friend was well connected
The children were well behaved
The dogs are badly behaved
The house was badly designed
But, in these cases, we often encounter the hyphenated use, especially with well, poorly and badly as in:
The question was well-aimed
Her friend was well-connected
The children were well-behaved
The dogs are badly-behaved
The house was badly-designed
The letter was a poorly-phrased
The car was poorly-made
although such uses are frequently disparaged and often considered plain wrong.
What is not acceptable is a hyphen in predicative uses of a phrase which is clearly just the adjective modified by an adverb and not part of a compound adjective, so we allow:
The customers were well pleased
The problems were massively exaggerated
The door was entirely rotten
The letter was bitterly worded
The problems were entirely forgotten
but not:
*The customers were well-pleased
*The problems were massively-exaggerated
*The door was entirely-rotten
*The letter was bitterly-worded
*The problems were entirely-forgotten
Advice to learners (and you):
- Insert the hyphen in attributive phrases and omit it in predicative phrases, but:
- Insert the hyphen in both uses if you like in certain standard and well-worn phrases which are idiomatically very often hyphenated including well-worn, well-known, well-formed and others (but omitting the hyphen in predicative position is still correct).
- Hyphenate the adverb and the adjective in all attributive uses with common intensifiers such as well, badly, poorly, fully etc.
- Do not hyphenate less frequent adverbs when the adjective can stand alone with no great difference in meaning.
- Hyphenate all attributive phrases when the adjective standing alone carries no or a significantly different meaning.
Modifying another adverb |
|
playing astonishingly maturely |
Here are some examples. Which ones are acceptable and which aren't? Why? Click here when you have decided.
- She spoke fantastically quickly
- They came surprisingly early
- I spoke interestingly persuasively
- They understood quickly intelligently
With luck you have identified c. and d. as
the wrong ones but accepted a. and b.
The easy rule is that when
an adverb modifies another adverb it must
function as an intensifier of some sort.
An attempt to make it function in any other way results in non-English.
So, for example, if we take an adverb of manner as in:
She was quietly angry
which modifies the adjective, we get a well-formed sentence which makes
sense.
If, however, we try to make it modify an adverb, we
get something like:
*She spoke quietly angrily
and that is not acceptable.
So, when adverbs modify adjectives the usual outcome is acceptable
English. We can have
She was
quietly
confident
but not
*She argued
quietly
confidently
Other
languages, by the way, do not have this restriction so it needs to be
taught.
There are rare cases when an intensifier can modify the adverb particle of a phrasal verb. For example, He spoke right out or She bowled him completely over. Rare, but possible.
A range of intensifiers can modify other adverbs in this way but
one adverb, very, resists modification for the most part so
we do not encounter, e.g.:
*greatly very nice
*a bit very foolish
and so on.
However, the adverb may be modified by so and that word can
serve to increase the strength of the adverb (as an emphasiser) as
in, e.g.:
That was so very kind of her
We were so very grateful for her help
etc. or to tone down the strength of the adjective in negative
clauses as in. e.g.:
It wasn't so very different really
The car wasn't so very expensive, in fact
and so on.
There is a separate guide to the uses of both so and
such linked below.
Collocational issues |
|
bitterly cold |
All modification is, to some extent, constrained by semantic
considerations so we do not encounter, for example:
*It was vastly cold
because the sense of intensifiers such as enormously, hugely,
massively and vastly is not applicable to weather
conditions (with the odd exception of windy, incidentally).
We saw above, however, that there is an identifiable tendency in
English for some intensifiers to become delexicalised and, as the
original meaning is bleached out, the range of collocating
adjectives increases.
Intensifiers such as awfully, tremendously, fantastically,
terrifically, horribly, terribly, decidedly and so on while
some retain their negative connotations are frequently found with
positive adjectives with which they would not previously been
encountered. Thus we may find:
It was decidedly / tremendously / horribly /
terribly cold
etc.
There are, as you are probably aware, few rules that apply to picking the correct collocation in any language but learners can be led to noticing appropriate uses by raising awareness of some of the following:
- readily
collocates with explicable, available, accessible and a few other adjectives. It is much more widely used to modify participle adjectives and passive participles such as understood, explained, accommodated, admitted and so on. Its near synonym, easily, has similar characteristics. - openly
is even more restricted and collocates with hostile, aggressive, dishonest, corrupt and little else although it, too, is frequently used with participle adjectives such as displayed, rejected, shown etc. - bitterly
and other negative intensifiers such as desperately, terribly and so on will only collocate with adjectives which are themselves negative such as disappointed, unhappy, upset etc. - hugely
and others which refer to size (vastly etc.) are frequently used metaphorically and collocate with adjectives such as important, successful, profitable, popular, productive etc. - highly
collocates most naturally with positive adjectives, increasing their strength and is seen with intelligent, likely, unlikely, appreciated, suggestive, experienced, qualified, artistic, imaginative, skilled and similar descriptions. - particularly
and its synonyms such as exceptionally, remarkably, outstandingly collocates with both positive and negative descriptors such as nasty, nice, delicious, unpleasant, relaxing, stressful etc. - Other intensifiers, especially very are a lot less discerning and can be found with a range of adjectives.
- The amplifier incredibly has, by overuse, become virtually meaningless or, at least, with a meaning approximating to very.
quite, rather, fairly, pretty |
|
rather nice ice cream |
These four words cause difficulty both semantically and
syntactically so need separate treatment. On many websites
designed for learners (and, alas, teachers) you will find them
described as adverbs of degree. That is not the line taken
here but it is an acceptable analysis in the analysis of one of
them, fairly, as we shall see.
They are
intensifiers, serving to amplify or tone down the item they modify
and can be used with adjectives and adverbs. There,
unfortunately, the similarity ends.
Semantically, the strength of these four lies below too
and very but much depends on co-text and context.
The usual way to describe the meaning is on a scale with fairly
/ pretty
as the least powerful and rather as the strongest of the
four. That's actually rather misleading.
- fairly
is generally considered to be the weakest of the four, along with pretty, meaning something like moderately. It serves to tone down the strength of what it modifies.- It is used primarily with gradable adjectives and adverbs
and not with those that represent one end of a scale or which
are, in themselves, not scalable. For example:
- We accept:
She was fairly lucky to do so well
We came home fairly late
A fairly heavy snowfall slowed the traffic
It was fairly probable that we would have more snow
A fairly likely outcome is more expense
I bought it fairly cheaply
They came fairly quickly
It rained fairly heavily last night
but ... - we do not accept:
*That is fairly freezing
*That was fairly delicious
*The fairly boiling weather
*I felt fairly devastated
*She came fairly unexpectedly
because these adjectives represent the extreme of a scale so cannot be modified with fairly. - nor do we accept:
*They were fairly alone
*They were fairly identical
*A fairly untrue statement
*It was fairly perfectly done
*He spoke fairly mistakenly
because these adjectives are not scalable at all and cannot be modified with fairly.
- We accept:
- Very colloquially, however, fairly can be used with
ungradable adjectives and some verbs and in this case it serves to
amplify the sense rather than tone it down so
we can hear (but not usually read) for example:
I was fairly disgusted, I can tell you!
It was fairly freezing in the car!
He fairly rushed in
etc. In all these cases, the function of fairly to amplify the adjective or verb phrase is signalled by placing heavy stress on the whole adjective phrase.
The verbs which are used in this case are, generally speaking, unscalable. Less emphatic verbs do not naturally collocate with fairly so, e.g.:
*I fairly disliked the play
is not acceptable but
I fairly hated the play
is.
When the word modifies a verb phrase it is not an intensifier, it is an adverb of manner. - Determiner position:
when fairly modifies a gradable adjective + noun phrase, it must come after the determiner, before the adjective so we get:
a fairly good party
or
some fairly interesting books
not
*fairly a good party
or
*fairly some interesting books - fairly can modify a verb providing the verb is
quite strong, as we saw, so, although:
*I fairly like her
*She fairly hopes to be here
are not allowed, we can allow:
I fairly adored the play
She fairly hated the food
and in these cases the semantic function is amplifying but the grammatical function is an adverb of manner, not an intensifier at all. - fairly cannot be used to intensify a noun so:
*It is fairly a mess
*They got fairly a bargain
etc. are disallowed. - fairly cannot modify comparative or superlative forms (see below
for what can). We cannot, therefore, have:
*It was fairly better
*She was fairly the tallest
- It is used primarily with gradable adjectives and adverbs
and not with those that represent one end of a scale or which
are, in themselves, not scalable. For example:
- pretty
This word is a normal central adjective but it is also an intensifying adverb confined to colloquial English and, in that setting, it is very common. It is usually at the same strength level as fairly meaning moderately. It serves to tone down the strength of what it modifies but when it is heavily stressed, it may act as an amplifier.- It is used with gradable adjectives and adverbs. For example:
- We accept:
She was pretty lucky to do so well
We came home pretty late
A pretty heavy snowfall slowed the traffic
It was pretty probable that we would have more snow
A pretty likely outcome is more expense
I bought it pretty cheaply
They came pretty quickly
It rained pretty heavily last night
and in all these examples, fairly could be substituted with the same meaning and the same strength.
However, ... - Unlike fairly the word pretty can be
used routinely with both extreme and ungradable adjectives
(although the second use in particular is often disparaged
as incorrect despite how commonly it is heard). This
is the first way in which it differs from fairly.
In these cases, the adverb serves, when the whole
phrase is stressed, to amplify not tone down the meaning.
We allow:
It was pretty freezing
That was pretty delicious
I felt pretty devastated
She came pretty unexpectedly
and some people will also allow:
They were pretty alone
They were pretty identical
A pretty untrue statement
It was pretty perfectly done
He spoke pretty mistakenly
even though these adjectives are not scalable at all and cannot be modified with fairly.
- We accept:
- Determiner position:
Exactly like fairly, when pretty modifies a gradable adjective + noun phrase, it must come after the determiner, before the adjective so we get:
a pretty good party
or
some pretty interesting books
not
*pretty a good party
or
*pretty some interesting books - pretty cannot be used to intensify a noun so:
*It is pretty a mess
*They got pretty a bargain
etc. are disallowed.
(But, of course, as an adjective it is common in attributive use.) - The second way that pretty differs from
fairly is that fairly may be used to modify a
strong verb in colloquial English so we encounter:
I fairly loved the book
but pretty cannot do that so:
*I pretty loved the book
is not heard.
This word is, therefore, not able to act as an adverb of degree at all. - The word pretty can, however, combine with well
to form an amplified adverb phrase modifying a verb so we can
encounter:
They pretty well ruined the party
They pretty well spoilt the dinner
but the use is generally confined to verbs with negative connotation. - pretty cannot modify comparative or superlative forms (see below
for what can). We cannot, therefore, have:
*It was pretty better
*She was pretty the tallest
- It is used with gradable adjectives and adverbs. For example:
- quite
is polysemous and causes difficulty because of its colligational characteristics with certain adjective and adverb types. It can act to tone down or amplify what it modifies but there are restrictions.- when it modifies gradable adjectives, it means moderately
and tones the meaning down.
- so in:
It was quite nice
She was quite helpful
They were quite disappointed
They arrived quite quickly
The boat sailed quite slowly
The weather was quite good
the adverb quite can be replaced with fairly with very little change to the sense.
- so in:
- when quite modifies an unscalable adjective or one which
already represents an extreme end of a scale, it means
completely and amplifies.
- so, with extreme-end
adjectives:
She acted quite absurdly
They are quite exhausted
That is quite superb
etc. the adverb is an amplifier - and with unscalable adjectives:
That is quite perfect
You are quite wrong
I am quite alone here
it also amplifies.
- so, with extreme-end
adjectives:
- ambiguity can arise with some adjectives and adverbs which
seem to straddle the border between gradable and ungradable
concepts. For example:
They come here quite regularly
can mean
with complete regularity
or
with fair regularity
and
The experiment was quite successful
may mean
completely successful
or
fairly successful
The second interpretation is likely to be the most common in all cases unless the word quite is heavily stressed. - determiner position:
- when quite modifies a gradable adjective +
indefinite article + noun
phrase, it normally comes before the indefinite article so we prefer:
quite a good party
to
a quite good party
although both orders are possible. - when quite co-occurs with the definite article,
it must precede it so we allow
quite the best outcome
but not
*the quite best outcome - with other determiners, it follows the determiner, so we
get:
some quite nice pictures
and not
*quite some nice pictures - when quite modifies an unscalable or
extreme-end adjective, it can come in either position with
any determiner so we
get:
quite a wonderful evening
and
a quite wonderful evening
- when quite modifies a gradable adjective +
indefinite article + noun
phrase, it normally comes before the indefinite article so we prefer:
- quite can amplify the sense of nouns and noun
phrases. For example:
That was quite a party
That was quite a fiasco
He was quite an idiot to do that - quite can modify verbs directly in the way that
fairly and pretty cannot so we allow:
I'd quite like to see her
She quite enjoys parties
etc., but not, as we saw above:
*I'd fairly like to see her
*She pretty enjoys parties
If the verb is itself unscalable, the meaning is, again, completely:
I quite agree with you
I quite abominate sugar in tea
I quite understand
etc.
When the word modifies a verb phrase it is not an intensifier, it is an adverb of manner. - quite cannot modify comparative forms (see below)
but it can modify superlative forms and means completely.
- We cannot have:
*It was quite nicer weather
*That's quite more expensive - but we allow:
She was quite the most miserable guest
It was quite the most delicious meal
- We cannot have:
- when it modifies gradable adjectives, it means moderately
and tones the meaning down.
- rather
is, in terms of strength in a medial position between fairly and quite (in the sense of completely).- rather acts to amplify positive attributes and tone down
negative ones
- with positive attributes, especially when preceded by
really, it is an amplifier
That's really rather good
That's rather generous of you - with negative attributes, it tones down the power of the
adjective
That's rather ugly but it works
She's really rather arrogant but has good reasons to be
- with positive attributes, especially when preceded by
really, it is an amplifier
- rather is the only one of the four used with
comparative forms.
- We can have, therefore
It was rather more expensive than I expected
She is rather ruder than she should be
I spoke rather more hastily than I should have
They are rather hotter curries than I like - but not
*It was fairly more expensive
*She spoke quite more rudely
*They are pretty hotter
etc.
- We can have, therefore
- rather cannot, however, modify superlative forms so while we
allow, e.g.:
That was quite the stupidest thing to say
we do not permit:
*That was rather the stupidest thing to say - rather can modify words at the extremes of scales
and carries the meaning of considerably as in, for example
The sisters are rather alike
That was rather extraordinary
The play was rather marvellous
It was rather beautifully written
etc. - rather cannot, however, modify unscalable
adjectives in the way that quite can. So, we
cannot have:
*That is rather mistaken
*She is not rather finished
*Are you rather ready? - Determiner position:
- when rather modifies either of the two types of
adjective + noun phrase permitted, it can come before or
after the determiner so we can have:
rather a good party
rather a wonderful outcome
a rather good party
a rather wonderful outcome
some rather good food - when rather is used with quantifiers, it
follows but may not precede the determiner
a few rather nice desserts
twelve rather rude children
but not
*rather a few nice desserts
*rather twelve rude children
- when rather modifies either of the two types of
adjective + noun phrase permitted, it can come before or
after the determiner so we can have:
- rather can also modify verbs directly as can quite.
In this case, therefore, it is acting as an adverb of
manner, not an intensifier.
So, we get:
I rather / quite enjoyed the football
We rather / quite liked the performance
When it is used with ungradable verbs, however, rather does not carry the sense of completely as quite does. There is, therefore, a difference between:
I rather agree with you
(= I tend to agree with you)
and
I quite agree with you
(= I completely agree with you)
To repeat, when the word modifies a verb phrase it is not an intensifier, it is an adverb of manner. - rather can also amplify the sense of some nouns and
noun phrases in the same way that quite can. We can
have, therefore:
He's rather a fool
That's rather a mess - rather is the only one
of these four adverbs which can precede too
so we allow:
That's rather too expensive
but not
*That's fairly too expensive
*That's pretty too expensive
*That's quite too expensive
- rather acts to amplify positive attributes and tone down
negative ones
Here's a summary of the main points only. We have included the
colloquial use of fairly with more extreme-end verbs. Even with
this inclusion, fairly is the least flexible of the adverbs.
It does, however, exist as a simple adverb of manner or disjunct along
with its opposite so we can have:
He judged the result fairly
Unfairly, he awarded a penalty
etc.
In that table, naturally, the word quite to mean
moderately, is inappropriate for use with extreme or unscalable
adjectives and superlatives. Equally, when the word is used to
mean completely, it cannot, semantically, be used with
scalable adjectives, verbs, nouns and comparative forms: hence the
blank cells.
The functions of pretty and rather depend on the
stress they are given but with no special stress they act as
downtoners (see above).
Alert readers will recall that at the outset we averred that
intensifiers do not directly modify verbs, that being the role of
adverbs of manner. However, in this section we have broken our
own restriction and suggested that three of these words (excluding
pretty) can, in some circumstances modify verbs directly.
That is the point of columns four and five above, of course, and it
is made clear in the discussion.
However, we need to repeat here that we have done this for the sake
of completeness, not theoretical purity and in fact in, e.g.:
She fairly despised her sister
I rather disliked the meal
Mary quite delighted in the present
John quite enjoyed the concert
all the adverbs are acting not as intensifiers but as simple adverbs
of manner. This may be a distinction on which it is unwise to
dwell too long with learners of the language.
really and almost |
|
Really?! |
The adverb really is troublesomely polysemous and can cause some comprehension and production issues, as well as some ambiguity, unless we are alert to the fact that it carries two distinct but connected meanings.
- amplifying
This is the way the word has been treated so far so, for example:
She's really intelligent
That's really helpful
etc.
The word really simply amplifies the meaning of the adjective.
Easy, and good enough for most learners. - truthfully
This is the original meaning of the word (and the one usually cited first in dictionaries). The word in this meaning is the adverb derived from the adjective real and works to signal that something is a fact rather than supposition or imitation.
There are two ways this is used:- We can have:
She is really intelligent
and we can also have:
She acts stupid but she's really intelligent
which is slightly ambiguous because it could mean:
She acts stupid but is very intelligent
or
She acts stupid but is, in reality, intelligent
We can avoid some of the ambiguity by moving the adverb and having:
She acts stupid but really is intelligent
The simple way to discover which is meant is to replace the adverb with the prepositional phrase adjunct, in reality. If that is possible, we are dealing with the truthfulness meaning, not the amplifying effect. - In negative sentences we see the same issue so:
She's really intelligent
will be taken to mean:
She's very intelligent
but
She's not really intelligent
can mean
She is not, in fact, intelligent
or
She's not very intelligent
Again, we can move the adverb to avoid the ambiguity and make it function as an attitude or content disjunct giving us:
Really, she's not intelligent
which has only one interpretation, i.e., that the speaker believes the proposition to be true.
- We can have:
The adverb really has one other ability not shared with
most other intensifiers in that it can itself act to modify another
intensifier. We cannot accept, for example:
*It was very absolutely lovely
*She was absolutely obviously exhausted
and so on because intensifiers for the most part do not co-occur.
However, we can use really in this way and accept:
It was really absolutely lovely
She was really obviously
exhausted
modifying boosters in both cases and also accept:
It was really entirely unique
That was really wholly unnecessary
where it modifies maximisers.
To an extent the adverb almost can also pull off this
trick but it only functions to downtone a maximiser as in:
That was almost perfectly done
I am almost wholly correct in this
and it cannot be similarly used to tone down a booster so we do not
accept:
*That was almost amazingly good
*It was almost significantly wrong
(Intensifiers may, of course, co-occur as adverbial phrases in,
for example:
It was fundamentally and completely wrong
She was downright, horribly rude
but in these cases, both intensifiers are modifying the adjective
separately, not modifying each other.)
Modifying a prepositional phrase |
|
straight into the river |
This is quite a common occurrence but only a small group of intensifying adverbs can do it. The effect can be to amplify, tone down or approximate the prepositional phrase. Here are some examples:
- She is dead / strongly against the
idea
(Note that in, e.g.,
She argued strongly against the idea
the adverb is modifying the verb, not the prepositional phrase but in
She is strongly against the idea
it modifies the prepositional phrase.) - He submitted it well inside
the deadline
(Note that in, e.g.,
He rode well
the adverb is modifying the verb, not the prepositional phrase but in
He rode well out of sight
it modifies the prepositional phrase.) - They walked way beyond the end of the lane
- She came shortly before the meeting started
- They married long after the child was born
- They live far away from me
- I want to come straight to the point
- He kicked it right over the fence
- His lecture was entirely / completely / totally / wholly over my head
- She fell clear through the ceiling
- She has been all over the world
- They were nearly in the clear
- She was almost in despair
- My house is directly / exactly / precisely opposite the petrol station
- She arrived way after midnight
- It jumped clean over the fence
- He cut it exactly / precisely in the middle
The examples above include the five most common adverbs that can do this:
dead, well, exactly, right and
clear
/ clean which are all amplifiers.
The use of wide in wide of
the mark is a fixed idiom deriving from archery. In this
case, it is adjectival rather than adverbial but behaves a little like a
prepositional phrase in itself. Compare, e.g.:
His estimate was wide of the real cost
The actual quantity was wide of the amount we wanted
The word is adverbial, however, in an expression such as
Keep them wide apart
where it modifies the adverb apart.
Prepositional phrases can also be used with intensifiers which
tone the meaning down or approximate so we allow, too:
They fell almost
into the river
He put it nearly in the
centre
They arrived virtually at
the same time
The car drove practically
into the river
His house is roughly
behind that hill
It was approximately
opposite the garage
A slightly arguable view is that some adverbial intensifiers,
notably those in this list, can be used to modify wh-
interrogatives so we get, e.g.:
Where exactly
do you want this?
When precisely did she
leave?
How widely is she known?
Just whom did you ask?
Why specifically did you do
that?
Whose properly was it?
and so on.
This is arguable because the adverbs can be seen to be modifying an
implicit prepositional phrase or noun phrase so we can expand the
clauses to get:
In what place exactly do you want this?
At what time precisely did she leave?
To what extent is she known?
Just which person did you ask?
For what reasons specifically did you do that?
To whom properly did it belong?
They may also be considered adjuncts modifying the verbs want,
leave, know, ask, do and be in the clauses.
However, such expressions form a teachable and useful set of targets
for the use of these sorts of adverbs.
Modifying a determiner |
|
nearly all the guests |
There are three sorts in these examples. What are they? Click here when you have an answer.
- Absolutely no idea
- Almost every student understood
- Nearly a dozen came
- Around twenty people arrived
- He stayed about an hour
- Here the adverb is an amplifier. In fact, it's just about the only one we use in this context and it often comes in tandem with pronouns such as nothing, no-one, none and everyone.
- This approximator modifies the determiner, every, but it can also modify articles as in Almost the best bit was the food. Like nearly, it can also modify numeric determiners as in Nearly 200 / Almost 200.
- This is a downtoner used for numeric determiners or certain adjectives (such as right) usually. Like almost, it can also modify other determiners as it does in the example.
- This is an approximator and the adverbs approximately, about and roughly act in a similar way. It usually modifies numeric determiners as in the example.
- This is another approximator modifying the indefinite article. You can only modify the indefinite article when it means one.
There is scope with these modifications for some vagueness to
occur so, for example:
almost 20
may signal anything between around 17 and 20 but probably not less,
and
around 20
will normally signal between 17 and 23.
Approximating prepositional phrases exhibit the same phenomenon so,
e.g.:
up to 40
signals no more than 40 but certainly more than 30 although,
technically, it should be any number not exceeding 40.
Equally,
over an hour
signals more than 60 minutes but probably not more than 75 although,
technically again, it should mean any length of time in excess of 60
minutes. We do not, however, find:
The universe formed over an hour ago
except in jest.
Modifying a noun phrase |
|
quite a storm |
These are rare and often quite informal modifications. Here are some examples:
- It was quite some do
(see above for more) - What a fool she has been!
- He left the kitchen in rather /
quite a mess
(see above for more) - He is such a fool
- We spent a good six hours
on the essay
(this is, in fact adjectival rather than an adverb modifier)
These, too, are sometimes classified as pre-determiners but for teaching purposes that is not a source of great concern. Their function is to amplify the meaning of the noun.
Teaching the area |
While it is somewhat rare to focus purely on intensifiers as a
teaching target, it may be done in an
effort to equip learners with greater language resources to add
impact to what they are saying or writing.
There are, however, some issues to bear in mind.
Collocation and bleaching (delexicalisation) |
We saw above that certain adverbs collocate in predictable ways with certain types of adjectives so, for example:
- readily and easily collocate with explicable, available, accessible and a few other adjectives as well as a range of participle forms such as explained, taught, presented and so on.
- openly is quite restricted and collocates with hostile, aggressive, against, dishonest, corrupt and little else.
- bitterly and other negative intensifiers such as desperately, terribly and so on will only collocate with adjectives which are themselves negative such as disappointed, unhappy, upset etc.
- hugely and others which refer to size (vastly etc.) are frequently used metaphorically and collocate with adjectives such as important, successful, profitable, popular, productive etc.
- highly collocates most naturally with positive adjectives, increasing their strength and is seen with intelligent, likely, unlikely, appreciated, suggestive, experienced, qualified, artistic, imaginative, skilled and so on.
So, if these form the topic of a lesson or part of a lesson, it
is important to present them with typical co-textual adjectives and
adjective phrases. Not to do so will often lead to errors such
as
*She was openly happy
?They were highly inexperienced
and so on.
While it is almost always possible, for particular effect, for
unusual collocations to be coined on the spur of the moment by
native speakers, it is unhelpful for teaching purposes to focus on
rarities.
However, we also know that some intensifiers have been bleached of their original meanings and now collocate very widely indeed although a few still retain positive or negative connotations.
- Among those which do not even have positive or negative
connotations are terribly, tremendously, terrifically,
fantastically, incredibly, awfully, certainly, decidedly,
obviously, perfectly, extremely and so on. They are
so promiscuous, in fact, that once learned the adverbs may be
used to modify almost any gradable adjective.
They form, therefore, a teachable set. - Others which are mostly confined to negative senses include dreadfully, appallingly, horribly, shockingly, outrageously, horrendously, atrociously, abysmally and a few others and these need to be taught along with their collocating co-text adjectives.
- Yet others are mostly confined to positive senses and they include delightfully, brilliantly, magnificently, marvellously, superbly and so on and they have to be presented with collocating positive adjectives.
Frequency |
It makes sense, especially at lower levels, to focus on those
intensifiers which are most frequent in the language and which will
be most often encountered and provide the greatest range for the
learners. For that, we need to refer to some corpus research.
For British English spoken data the following are presented as
the most frequent, most widely collocating intensifiers.
(Source: Zhiber and Korotina, 2019, p80.)
The figures of American Standard spoken English are similar
although absolutely exchanges places with pretty
and completely and entirely also swap places.
Similar figures are obtained from newspaper language.
It will not have escaped your notice that all these intensifiers are
delexicalised and no longer carry significant positive or negative
connotations.
However, there is a mix here in terms of the semantic functions with
totally, absolutely, completely and entirely
functioning as maximisers while the others are boosters. This
needs your focus if learners are not to produce errors such as
*It was totally cold
*That was very perfect
Teaching these nine intensifiers first will nevertheless pay dividends in
terms of both productive and receptive skills.
quite, rather, fairly, pretty |
The analysis of these four adverbs carried out above reveals the
complications and numerous pitfalls so they need to be handled with
great care if your learners are not to be overwhelmed by trying to
remember how the adverbs are used.
The most flexible of all is the adverb rather but it is
also the least frequent. The adverb fairly is quite
limited in terms of syntax and, of course, quite carries
two distinct meanings.
A sure way to bewilder learners is to present them together with no
or inadequate focus on meaning.
Context |
There are three issues here:
- Style
We saw above that these items are, mostly, confined in their intensifying use to informal writing and spoken language so that is the context in which they should be set. Not focusing on style may lead learners to overusing the items in more formal writing in certain registers which will be jarring and inappropriate.
Indeed, Zhiber and Korotina, drawing on Long and Christensen (2008) state that:overuse of intensifying adverbs (very, clearly, obviously and the like) negatively affects the credibility of a legal argument. The authors measure intensifier use against outcomes and prove that excessive intensification in appellate briefs is directly related to adverse outcomes.
It takes no great leap of imagination to guess that in scholarly registers other than the law, a writer's credibility will be significantly undermined by overuse of intensification.
- Focus of intensification
It has been observed that by far the most frequent use of intensifying adverbs and other adverbials is to modify adjectives and adjectival phrases. Bäcklund (1973), cited in Zhiber and Korotina, concluded that 72% of intensifying adverbs were used with adjectival heads. Given the overwhelming use of them in this syntactical context, therefore, it is clearly arguable that this is the way they should be initially presented.
The items can, as we saw above, be used to modify a range of other word and phrase classes but such modification is probably better left alone until your learners are confident in using them as adjective modifiers. - Intensifiers of whatever sort are not performing the same
function as adverbs of manner and it is wise to keep them
separate in presentation and practice. If we mix up, for
example:
She drove amazingly
with
She drove amazingly well
then we are inviting some confusion.
Equally, a word such as intensely is performing a very different semantic and grammatical function in:
She worked intensely on the problem
in which it is an adverb of manner from
It was intensely painful
in which it is an intensifier.
Related guides | |
adverbs | for a general guide to this word class |
intensifying adjectives | for a parallel guide to emphasisers, amplifiers, downtoners and limiters |
prepositional phrases | these are sometimes modified by a small set of adverbs and are often adverbial in nature |
so and such | this is a short guide to these two troublesome words which, in some cases, can act to amplify the strength of adjectives and adverbs |
adverbials | for a guide to other verb-phrase modifications |
adjectives | for a guide to a related area |
gradability | for more on scales of adverbs and adjectives |
pre- and post-determiners | pre-determiners are mentioned twice in this guide |
Click here for two short tests on this.
Reference:
Quirk, R, Greenbaum, S, Leech, G & Svartvik, J, 1972,
A Grammar of
Contemporary English, Harlow: Longman
Zhiber, EV & Korotina, LV, 2019, Intensifying adverbs in the
English language, in Training, Language and Culture Vol 3 Issue
3 pp. 70-88 doi: 10.29366/2019tlc.3.3.5